Inventing the Renaissance
The Myth of a Golden Age
Subjects
- HISTORY / Europe / General
- HISTORY / Europe / Renaissance
- HISTORY / Social History
By Ada Palmer
A New Yorker Best Book of 2025
An irreverent new take on the Renaissance, which reveals it as anything but Europe's golden age.
From the darkness of a plagued and war-torn Middle Ages, the Renaissance (we're told) heralds the dawning of a new world--a halcyon age of art, prosperity, and rebirth. Hogwash! or so says award-winning novelist and historian Ada Palmer. In Inventing the Renaissance, Palmer turns her witty and irreverent eye on the fantasies we've told ourselves about Europe's not-so-golden age, myths she sets right with sharp clarity.
Palmer's Renaissance is altogether desperate. Troubled by centuries of conflict, she argues, Europe looked to a long-lost Roman Empire (even its education practices) to save it from unending war. Later historians met their own political challenges with a similarly nostalgic vision, only now they looked to the Renaissance and told a partial story. To right this wrong, Palmer offers fifteen provocative portraits of Renaissance men and women (some famous, some obscure) whose lives reveal a far more diverse, fragile, and wild Renaissance than its glowing reputation suggests.
Product Details
- Paperback
- 768 pages
- ISBN
- 9780226852591
- Publisher
- University Of Chicago Press (5/27/26)
- Dimensions
- 6 x 0.5 x 9 inches
- Subjects
Subjects
- HISTORY / Europe / General
- HISTORY / Europe / Renaissance
- HISTORY / Social History



